C-Dogs SDL is a port of the old DOS arcade game C-Dogs to modern operating systems. C-Dogs is an arcade shoot-em-up which lets players work alone or co-operativly during missions, and against each other in the "dogfight" deathmatch mode. The original DOS version of C-Dogs came with several built in missions and dogfight maps, and this version is no exception. The author of the DOS version of C-Dogs is Ronny Wester.

The CyaSSL embedded SSL library is a lightweight SSL library written in ANSI C and targeted for embedded and RTOS environments, primarily because of its small size, speed, and feature set. It is commonly used in standard operating environments and cloud services as well because of its royalty-free pricing and excellent cross platform support. CyaSSL supports industry standards up to the current TLS 1.2 and DTLS 1.2 levels, is up to 20 times smaller than OpenSSL, and offers progressive ciphers such as HC-128, RABBIT, and NTRU.

EGSL is a small interpreter which can execute Lua scripts. It includes some functions for fast and easy game development. These are image manipulation functions, functions for 2D drawing, sound and music, input via mouse, keyboard, and joypad, and some helper functions. The engine is based on SDL, SDL_gfx, and SDL_mixer, and additionally on SDL_image on Haiku-OS.

Gnash is a Flash movie player and Web browser
plugin for Firefox, Mozilla, Konqueror, and Opera.
Gnash supports many SWF v7 features and
ActionScript3 classes. Gnash supports the majority
of Flash opcodes up to SWF version 7, and a wide
sampling of ActionScript classes for SWF version
8.5. Gnash also runs on many GNU/Linux
distributions, embedded GNU/Linux, FreeBSD,
NetBSD, OpenBSD, non x86-processors, and 64-bit
architectures. There is also a standalone player
for GNOME or KDE based desktops.

KShutdown is a graphical shutdown utility for Linux and Windows. It allows you to turn off or suspend a computer at a specified time. It features various time and delay options, commandline support, and notifications.

METAXPON ("Metachron" in Greek letters) is a small and fast audio DSP library for time-scale manipulation of 16-bit integer or 32-bit floating point stereo audio data streams. It employs a rigid phase-locked vocoder with dedicated transient detection and processing, and can work in real-time or non-real-time. Four editions are included - a portable edition and three x86 editions. The portable edition can be built with any ANSI C compiler and is OS- and architecture-independent. The three x86 editions are written in assembly using the FPU, 3DNow!, and SSE instruction sets, respectively, with automatic selection between them depending on the CPU capabilities. They can be compiled with MASM, JWASM, or NASM, producing libraries of object files in 8 formats.

The MirBSD Korn Shell (mksh) is an actively developed successor of pdksh (the Public Domain Korn Shell), aimed at producing a shell good for interactive use, but with the primary focus on scripting. It is intended to be portable to most *nix-like operating systems as long as they're not too obscure. mksh incorporates improvements from OpenBSD and Debian, as well as bugfixes and enhancements developed for the MirOS, FreeWRT, and MidnightBSD projects and Android. The emacs command line editing mode is UTF-8 capable, and Byte Order Marks are ignored in scripts. The shell supports large files, as well as all pdksh and some csh, AT&T ksh, zsh, and GNU bash features, is compatible with the Bourne shell and POSIX (within limits), has no limit on array sizes, and incorporates some other useful builtins and features. While being already fast and small (without losing functionality), flags to make it even smaller can be given at compile time. An interactive shell reads "~/.mkshrc" on startup.

PhysicsFS is a library to provide abstract access to
various archives. The programmer defines a "write
directory" on the physical filesystem. No file writing
done through the PhysicsFS API can leave that
write directory, for security. For file reading, the
programmer lists directories and archives that form
a "search path". Once the search path is defined, it
becomes a single, transparent, hierarchical
filesystem. This makes for easy access to ZIP files
in the same way as you access a file directly on
the disk, and it makes it easy to ship a new archive
that will override a previous archive on a per-file
basis. Symbolic links can be disabled, for added
safety. Finally, PhysicsFS gives you a platform-
abstracted means to determine if CD-ROMs are
available, the user's home directory, where in the
real filesystem your program is running, etc.